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NASA | Tour of the Electromagnetic Spectrum: Ultraviolet

Explore the ultraviolet band of the electromagnetic spectrum, including the ways insects and other animals can sense ultraviolet waves, how the different bands within the ultraviolet domain interact differently with the atmosphere, and how ultraviolet sensing has expanded our view of the universe.

The electromagnetic – or EM – spectrum is made up of seven kinds of electromagnetic energy with each corresponding to a different range. From lowest energy to highest energy, the seven groupings along the spectrum are: Radio Waves, Microwaves, Infrared, Visible Light, Ultraviolet, X-rays, and Gamma Rays. Electromagnetic energy travels in waves and spans a broad spectrum from very long radio waves to very short gamma rays. Read in the order listed above, waves increase in frequency and decrease in wavelength. The visible range, which is the only portion of the spectrum the human eye can detect, represents only a very tiny portion of the entire electromagnetic spectrum.

All electromagnetic radiation is made up of up of fields of electricity and magnetism interacting with each other. Electric fields can be static – like the static electricity that can hold a balloon to the wall. Magnetic fields can be static, too – like what holds a refrigerator magnet in place. However, electric and magnetic fields can also change and move together, and when that happens, the interaction produces waves: electromagnetic waves. EM energy can be described by frequency, wavelength, or energy, all of which are inter-related by the expression E = Frequency / Wavelength. Frequency is directly proportional to energy (they increase and decrease together) while wavelength is inversely proportional to energy (as wavelength increases, energy decreases).

Radio and microwaves are usually described by frequency (units of Hertz), infrared and visible light by wavelength (units of meters), and x-rays and gamma rays by energy (units of electron-volts). Though referred to by different names – light, EM radiation, or rays – all EM energy is made up of the same kinds of waves. The convention of using different units for different parts of the spectrum is simply a convenience that has to do with using numbers that are neither too large nor too small. The distinctions between the energy bands are simply a convention that eases communication. The EM spectrum doesn’t actually have breaks or chapters.

When you think of a water wave in the ocean, it might be easy to imagine the water oscillating up and down, creating a traveling waveform across the water. Even easier to imagine: making waves travel along a jump-rope secured to a wall at one end. In that case, it’s easy to see that the wave’s oscillation is perpendicular to the direction of its forward movement. In other words, the movement of the rope may be up and down, but the wave that travels through the rope is moving forward or backward—two perpendicular directions. These kinds of waves are called “transverse” waves. In transverse waves, the direction of the wave is perpendicular to the direction of applied energy. Another type of wave is a “longitudinal” wave, in which the wave moves parallel to the applied energy. With sound waves and other longitudinal waves, molecules vibrate and bump into one another, passing energy along the same direction the wave is moving.

While some transverse waves and some longitudinal waves might be easy to imagine, electromagnetic wave are harder to visualize. Because the wave is traveling in a direction that’s perpendicular to both the electric field and the magnetic field, thinking about EM waves requires three-dimensional visualization. Transverse waves like the jump-rope example give a close approximation, but electromagnetic radiation is more complex. One important feature of EM radiation is that, since its movement is based on the interaction of electric and magnetic fields, and electric and magnetic forces are possible over long distances, EM waves can travel through a vacuum. No material medium is necessary. Remember that low-energy EM radiation has longer wavelengths, corresponding to lower frequencies. High-energy EM radiation has shorter wavelengths, corresponding to higher frequencies.

All EM radiation travels at the same speed: the speed of light.

The categories along the spectrum – Radio, Microwave, Infrared, Visible, Ultraviolet, X-ray, Gamma Ray - represent a useful breakdown of EM radiation that helps scientists understand and visualize energy sources on, in, and under the Earth as well as throughout our solar system, galaxy, and universe.

Ultraviolet

You probably know ultraviolet – or UV – rays as the causes of sunburns. The Sun emits a wide variety of EM radiation, including infrared (which we feel as heat), visible (which we see with our eyes), and ultraviolet. The ultraviolet EM band, which has shorter wavelengths (10 to 400 nm) than visible light, is generally divided into three categories: UV-A, UV-B, and UV-C, with C being the most energetic. UV-C and most UV-B waves are absorbed by the ozone in Earth’s atmosphere. So, the reason we use sunscreen is actually to block the lower energy UV-A. Energetic EM radiation – like UV, X-rays, and gamma rays - can be harmful to living cells. The high-energy waves deliver intense energy bursts that can disrupt their functions, such as DNA replication. On the other hand, low-energy UV radiation can be useful for the growth of green plants.

UV light plays an important role in our current understanding of climate change and environmental science. Our atmosphere’s ozone layer is a crucial buffer that protects life on Earth from harmful UV rays, as it absorbs much of the UV radiation emitted by the Sun. Because of factors that scientists attribute at least in part to human activity, the ozone layer has developed a hole – and every year, it gets bigger, allowing more harmful UV rays to reach Earth’s living environments.

Ultraviolet light was discovered in 1801 by Johann Ritter, who conducted an experiment to explore the energy of light beyond the visible band of colors. He used photographic paper as a test background, since it was known that blue light would act on the paper more quickly than red. When the region beyond the blue range of the paper turned black very quickly, it indicated the presence of ultraviolet light. Humans can’t see UV light, but some insects, like bumblebees, can. Our telescopes and sensors can detect UV radiation, and scientists use data from UV sources to study solar activity, the composition of the Moon, star formation, evolution of galaxies, and the early universe.

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